Special
report: Reconstruction After
Earthquake
CHENGDU, June 27 (Xinhua) -- The threat of flood forced an urgent
evacuation of 20,000 people living downstream of three earthquake-formed lakes
detected on Thursday by helicopter reconnaissance in quake-hit Dujiangyan City
in southwest China's Sichuan Province.
The hydrological and meteorological departments in Sichuan issued a flood
warning on Friday, forecasting that the summer flood is likely to be the biggest
in a decade and come at the beginning of July, which is earlier than in past
years because of the effect of abnormal rainfall in May.
Precipitation in Sichuan between May and June was 30 percent to 70 percent
more than that of the same time last year, said China Meteorological Station
earlier this month.
The flood threatens over 10 million Chinese in the earthquake areas, many
living in tents and makeshift houses, some 40 days after the magnitude-8 quake
hit the province, killing some 70,000 people.
The earthquake is a challenge to flood control in Sichuan this year, as
quake-damaged reservoirs and river levees are now more vulnerable, said the
provincial headquarters of flood control and drought relief.
"If the flood comes, newly-built temporary settlements for homeless quake
survivors in low-lying plain will be inundated," said worried officials in Aba
Tibet and Qiang Autonomous Prefecture, where the earthquake's epicenter of
Wenchuan County was.
They moved over 110,000 quake survivors out of the mountainous areas to a
20-km valley strip to protect them from secondary geological disasters such as
landslides and mud flows in the wake of the earthquake.
If embankments could not hold flood water in Minjiang River, they would
have to carry out another round of massive evacuation of people living in tents
and makeshift houses at any moment.
"We have cancelled the building of temporary settlements for earthquake
victims in 12 villages in Yingxiu town, because of the flood threat," said Xiang
Enming, a disaster-relief director from south China's Guangdong Province, who is
helping reconstruction in the quake-hit township in Wenchuan.
Xiang, speaking on Thursday, said they would have to find a safer place to
evacuate the 5,800 villagers, but a new site has not yet been chosen.
Latest figures from the flood control headquarters suggested that the
earthquake has formed 34 lakes and damaged 1,803 reservoirs and 495 sections of
damaged embankments in Sichuan.
"Frequent landslides along mountain slopes can produce new quake lakes at
any moment. There are 56 blockage of rivers in Mianyang City," said An Tianyun,
director of the municipal water affairs bureau.
The city is home to the largest of the quake lakes in Tangjiashan, which
had forced an evacuation of more than 250,000 residents in Mianyang alone,
before drainage succeeded in reducing its risk earlier this month.
However, An said that as the quake has shaken loose the geological
structure, and heavy rainfall would exacerbate the disasters.
The earthquake and its aftershocks have caused severe damage in 18 counties
in Sichuan, with three of them in Aba prefecture being the worst hit. The
Plateau Meteorological Research Institute in Chengdu warned the pending summer
flood, in tandem with heavy rains, would cause more massive and devastating
geological disasters in the quake-hit region.
In Mianzhu and Deyang cities, rehearsals of urgent evacuations have been
staged, while water affairs departments closely watch changes in rivers and
lakes.
The province has mobilized round-the-clock patrolling on dangerous sites
for geological disasters and flooding, with the intention of providing early
warnings to minimize casualties.